Sad
news from Stuart Ross: that Paris, Ontario poet, editor and former publisher
and bookseller Nelson Ball died yesterday afternoon in Brantford after an extended illness.
In
my review of his Chewing Water (Mansfield
Press, 2016) [see that here] I mentioned how Cameron Anstee has referred to
Ball as “Canada’s greatest practicing minimalist poet.” Ball emerged in the
1960s in Toronto as part of an enormous wave of poets and small press editors
and publishers, and his Weed/Flower
magazine, which quickly flourished into Weed/Flower Press, was one of the more memorable operations throughout the period, and one that published books and
chapbooks by a growing generation of exciting poets from both sides of the
Canadian/American border (and occasionally beyond). Some of the authors he
published included John Newlove, bpNichol, Anselm Hollo, William Hawkins and
Rosemary Eckert (and if you dig through his Weed/Flower
magazine, you can even find an early poem or two by Bruce Cockburn). His books
and his poems and his letters and his editing were all given equal weight, and
Nelson employed such a quiet and deceptive simplicity that could only emerge
from a lengthy and detailed attention.
For
those familiar with Ball’s work—produced over the years through numerous small
press books, chapbooks, pamphlets and leaflets—his precision and timing is
unmistakable, composing sublime poems that are infamous for their capacity to
hold both volume and breath in such small spaces. However quiet and unassuming
both he and his work might have appeared (Nelson was notoriously both deeply
humble and generous), Ball’s work went on to influence multiple generations of
Canadian poets, including jwcurry, Gary Barwin, Stuart Ross, Mark Truscott,
Kemeny Babineau, Michael e. Casteels and Cameron Anstee, among so many, many
others.
Seemingly
retiring from poetry during the 1980s for the sake of bookselling (as a collector/antiquarian
bookseller of literary ephemera), he reemerged to enjoy a second chapter as a
poet with the publication of With Issa: Poems 1964-1971 (ECW Press,
1991), a book followed by Bird Tracks on Hard Snow (ECW Press, 1994), The
Concrete Air (The Mercury Press, 1996), Almost Spring (The Mercury
Press, 1999), At The Edge Of The Frog Pond (The Mercury Press, 2004) and
In This Thin Rain (Toronto ON: Mansfield Press, 2012), as well as a
large array of smaller publications through Apt. 9 Press, BookThug, Curvd
H&z, MindWare, fingerprinting inkoperated, Letters, Rubblestone Press,
above/ground press and Laurel Reed Books.
With
the publication of his selected poems, Certain Details: The Poetry of Nelson Ball, selected with an introduction by Stuart Ross (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2017) [see my review of such here],
Ball was almost in the midst of a third chapter, one that included new levels
of attention (as well as the bpNichol Chapbook Award). He continued to quietly write and publish (in 2015, Niagara This Week even referred to Ball’s prior two year period as “prolific”), and even self-publish, from a new volume with Mansfield Press to small chapbooks to a volume of poems for children, each put together
with careful detail. It was a chapter that coincided, as well, with his
official retirement from bookselling, allowing his attention to focus, again,
on the page and to the quiet spaces between so much noise that distracted, it
would seem, just about everyone but him.
He
was always quite kind, and he was more than kind and generous to me, having
long been a supporter of and subscriber to above/ground press (he even allowed
me to produce his chapbook Scrub Cedar
back in March 2003). I’m sure a list of those he was generous to in similar
ways would most likely be a rather comprehensive history of small poetry
publishing in Canada. To reach out to him was to have him reach back.
I
was only able to spend time with him once, during a visit years ago to Toronto.
I had gone to see a show by his wife, Barbara, and saw a quiet man standing on
one side of the room. I introduced myself, and he seemed both surprised and
pleased to be recognized. He seemed like a quieter version of jwcurry, somehow;
same beard, same lanky figure at the side of the room, attempting to be present
but somehow invisible, taking in as much as he could.
His
most recent publication appeared this past year through Cameron Anstee’s Apt. 9
Press, A Letter to Amanda Bernstein and a Checklist of Weed/Flower Press (Apt. 9 Press, 2019), something I wrote briefly about here. And, given I’m away for the weekend (caregiving my father,
who has ALS), I haven’t my library around me, so I offer this poem of Nelson’s,
pilfered from a review I did moons back of Stuart Ross’ Hardscrabble:
Still
a
crow
hangs
in the air
facing
the strong wind
still
there
Nelson
is predeceased by his wife, the artist Barbara Caruso, who died on December 30,
2009 [see my obituary for her here].
A lovely tribute and thoughtful summary.
ReplyDelete